in-wall volume control 1 input into 2 speakers [message #28509] |
Sat, 23 July 2005 23:42 |
Bpb Baker
Messages: 2 Registered: May 2009
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Esquire |
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I recently built and new home and was able to have it pre-wired for multiroom speakers and have the speakers installed at the time. Now that I am hooking up the receiver and multiroom amp up, I have noticed that one of the cables run out to one of the outside speakers is not conducting signal. I have checked the cable going from the in-wall volume know to the speaker and it is working. Can I run 1 input into 2 speakers? I realized I will only be getting one channel and that, I believe the resistance will drop from 8 ohms (which is the impedance of each outside speaker) to 4 ohms. Should I use an impedance matching volume control? I do not want to tear up any of the new walls/carpet and I don't have time to do anything else. I realize this is just a stop-gap solution but can I do it? Thanks, Bob Baker
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Re: in-wall volume control 1 input into 2 speakers [message #28511 is a reply to message #28510] |
Sun, 24 July 2005 14:06 |
Bpb Baker
Messages: 2 Registered: May 2009
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Esquire |
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Thanks. The problem is definitely the cable from the wall unit to the outside box. My guess is that it got damaged by a staple of something. I know kick myself for not checking before the walls were finished but since all the cable is monster-type, I just did not think it would be a problem. If you have any other solutions, I would appreciate it. Bob Baker
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Re: in-wall volume control 1 input into 2 speakers [message #28512 is a reply to message #28511] |
Sun, 24 July 2005 15:24 |
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Wayne Parham
Messages: 18791 Registered: January 2001
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Illuminati (33rd Degree) |
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Investigate it just a little bit more when you have some extra time. If you're lucky, maybe the damage isn't as hard to repair as you think. Maybe the connection is bad at the wall plates, or near the end where you can get to it.Check to see if the lines are shorted together with an ohmmeter. Then jumper one end and go to the other and check for continuity. This will tell you what kind of problem you are having. If a staple went through, I would expect a short across the pair, not an open in one or both lines. It could cut through both conductors, shorting them together. But I doubt a staple would have cut the wire in half. If the line is open, I supose someone might have cut it with a saw or something. Maybe a finish carpenter cut clear through. But maybe the line was moved around enough while people were working that a connection broke loose. So I'd check the ends.
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